Store owners say plastic bag ban causes more shoplifting

Thieves with reusable bags harder to track, Seattle store owners say

By CASEY MCNERTHNEY, SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF

Updated 3:24 pm, Thursday, February 28, 2013

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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A customer enters the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did have the highest theft. less

A customer enters the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of inebriates and drug ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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Customers browse aisles in the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

Customers browse aisles in the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 3 of 13

A man chugs a bottle of fortified wine behind the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

A man chugs a bottle of fortified wine behind the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 4 of 13

Booze and beer cans and bottles are shown in a trash can outside of the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

Booze and beer cans and bottles are shown in a trash can outside of the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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Shawn Hayenga stocks shelves at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. "People that steal here think they are stealing from a big corporation. But they are stealing from our store owner and his wife. When our inventory comes up short, as it has been lately, the owners have to pay out of their own pocket," she said. less

Shawn Hayenga stocks shelves at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. "People that steal here think they are stealing from a big corporation. But they are stealing from our store owner and his wife. When our inventory ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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Pablo Temeyosa stocks frozen items at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store has seen a significant increase in the theft of frozen items and produce since Seattle's plastic bag ban went into effect. Frozen items and produce aren't traditionally something that shoplifters "would put down their pants," said an employee. less

Pablo Temeyosa stocks frozen items at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store has seen a significant increase in the theft of frozen items and produce since Seattle's plastic bag ban went into effect. Frozen ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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Store owner Mike Duke is shown at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. He has worked to prevent theft at the store but partly blames the plastic bag ban as customers bring their own bags into the store and often fill them with products they do not pay for. less

Store owner Mike Duke is shown at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. He has worked to prevent theft at the store but partly blames the plastic bag ban as customers bring their own bags into the store and often fill ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 8 of 13

A customer walks toward the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

A customer walks toward the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 9 of 13

The Lake City Grocery Outlet is shown. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

The Lake City Grocery Outlet is shown. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 10 of 13

Workers stock shelves at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

Workers stock shelves at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 11 of 13

A customer prepares to shop at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

A customer prepares to shop at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

Image 12 of 13

The produce section is shown at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of
inebriates and drug users in the neighborhood. Nearby Fred Meyer also
suffers from the highest theft rate in the entire chain, members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told. A company
spokeswoman said that's incorrect, but did not say which location did
have the highest theft. less

The produce section is shown at the Lake City Grocery Outlet. The store is struggling because of a significant increase in theft. The
increase is blamed on Seattle's plastic bag ban and a concentration of ... more

Photo: JOSHUA TRUJILLO

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Store owners say plastic bag ban causes more shoplifting

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When the Seattle City Council unanimously passed a ban on plastic bags and required businesses to charge a nickel for paper bags, city leaders believed it would be better all around.

"I think we've gotten to a place where it's really going to work for the environment, businesses and the community in general," Councilman Mike O'Brien said at the time.

But the bag ban is contributing to thousands of dollars in losses for at least one Seattle grocery store, and questions have been raised about the risk of food-borne illness from reusable bags that shoppers don't often wash.

Mike Duke, who operates the Lake City Grocery Outlet with his wife, said that since the plastic-bag ban started last July, he's lost at least $5,000 in produce and between $3,000 and $4,000 in frozen food.

"We've never lost that much before," said Duke, who found those numbers through inventories of stolen and damaged goods.

The Dukes opened the Lake City grocery store in June 2011, and Mike Duke said in the year before the plastic-bag ban losses in frozen food and produce were a small fraction of what he's seeing now. As he explained to seattlepi.com and also the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce, the shoplifters' patterns are difficult to detect.

They enter the store with reusable bags and can more easily conceal items they steal. The reusable bags require staff to watch much more closely, and even though the store has a loss-prevention officer and more than a dozen security cameras, it's tough to tell what a customer has paid for and what they may already have brought with them.

According to data released in January by Seattle Public Utilities, 21.1 percent of business owners surveyed said increased shoplifting because of the plastic bag ban was a problem. Results of another survey released in January – one done by an environmental advocacy group that found the ban "popular and successful" – didn't mention the problem of shoplifting.

Seattle's push for reusable bags – and shoplifters who have plagued several Lake City businesses – leave the Dukes in a predicament. Asking customers to check reusable bags at the counter would be burdensome to customers and staff, and prohibiting reusable bags and backpacks likely wouldn't work well in Seattle, which other business owners said is known for grand environmental ideas that can hinder small business efforts.

The Lake City Grocery Outlet also saw a dramatic increase in the number of hand baskets stolen after Seattle's plastic bag ban was initiated.

Shoplifters would fill up their baskets – some with purchased items and others with stolen groceries – and walk out of the store at 3020 N.E. 127th St. Duke would see the hand baskets discarded around Lake City and said the losses from the baskets and merchandise are in the thousands of dollars.

So last fall, the store did away with the remaining hand baskets to try and curb theft. But that frustrated some customers, and hasn't substantially stopped losses.

San Francisco was the first major U.S. city to ban plastic grocery bags in 2007. Multiple research papers have said there are negative repercussions to public health, though supporters question or discount the findings. One study released late last summer cited emergency room treatment data and said after the bag ban began there was a spike in the number of E. coli cases and an increase of deaths from foodborne illnesses.

Another paper from 2011 found E. coli in 8 percent of all reusable bags from randomly selected individuals at California and Arizona grocery stores. Washing the bags eliminated 99.9 percent of the pathogens, according to that study – though it raised questions of how often shoppers actually do.

King County hasn't had a public or private study on bacteria in reusable grocery bags.

But "it's not surprising that bags are going to collect germs over time," public health spokesman James Apa said. "People need to take common sense steps to protect themselves: wash their hands and wash their bags from time to time."

Duke started in the grocery business at age 16 and has worked for several stores, including Safeway, Albertson's and Fred Meyer before operating the Lake City Grocery Outlet. Neighbors and staff have praised the dedicated work from Duke and his wife, Patty, and say they're concerned for them if the neighborhood theft trend continues.

The latest rash of produce and frozen food theft comes in a neighborhood that many say is overwhelmed by problems brought by homeless and low-income people.

Both police and other business owners say transients are a huge part of the theft problem, though several Lake City business owners won't say that on the record for fear of being labeled as anti-homeless.

Members of the North Seattle Chamber of Commerce were told that theft at the Lake City Fred Meyer was the worst of any store in the Fred Meyer chain, which has more than 50 stores in Washington and Oregon. In an e-mail Thursday afternoon, Fred Meyer Public Affairs Director Melinda Merrill said in an e-mail the location is a "high-theft rate store, but all inner-city stores are, and Lake City is not our highest."

Asked which Fred Meyer store has the highest theft and how the Lake City Fred Meyer compares to Washington stores, Merrill did not immediately respond.

"The Chamber is not anti-homeless; Lake City is not anti homeless," North Seattle Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Diane Haugen said. "The question is the extent to which the hosting agencies follow up with the people they're bringing here."